I know its bad to say – but I just love those little mice. My cats bring them into the house quite alive and I have to thank them profusely so they drop them. Still stunned, I can collect them and bring them right back outside – to play”catch me if you can” one more day with Calvin & Hobbes. Your kitties (and pup) are just adorable, very photogenic.

My beloved elderly step-father once told my mother he didn’t have the heart to kill the mice on the farm, so he caught them and let them go. Then with his mischievous smile, he added, “And they beat me back to the house.” 😉

Your precious cat does look WAY to proper to chase mice but Scout…RAT Terrier! hahaha

Love that you used a no kill trap. HUGS for that. I do understand the need to exterminate…I really do…but we love PET mice and since we’ve grown attached to our PETS we use no kill traps out of respect for that. 😉

She’s alive!!! Good to see a post from you. I love mice. It’s hard for me to kill them. We just caught one in a trap the other night, and our cat brought it in the bedrooom – trap and all, and was playing with it under the bed! I like to think of the little mice having a nice life here – in a little room with quilts and matchbox beds. Poor things.

We had little, mouse visitors in our house every year, even our cat, Thelma, couldn’t keep them away. After she passed, I thought that our house might become invaded with the little pets, since we believe that they were somehow getting in from the crawl space under our house. Then my girlfriend, in Florida, sent me dried Lavender, which I placed in closets and drawers all around the house. We haven’t had a mouse since(knock on wood). 🙂 Good luck with evicting your mouseguest for good.

Deborah,
We once had a rat in our house, talk about creepy! It would come off the trees into the attic and make its way down to the kitchen (which had an open wall – aaahhh good times!). It would drag the box of rat poisoning all around the kitchen, it took about 2 weeks but he finally got his. Sorry, I’m ok with letting a mouse go but a rat is another story all together! It was as big as a small cat…

At least you have a cat. We just lived through our own mousecapades. I would catch one, think it was over, put all of the no-kill traps and other things back where they belong and then wham, I would hear another one.
It went on for weeks. We started texting the scoreboards to each other when we would catch one. That one must have had babies, the final score was Murphy 2, Gwen 9, and The Sphinx 3.

Soooo happy to see you here! Thanks so much for the note!! Im glad you are posting again.

Now, that said… UGGGGGGGGGGH!! I have such an dislike to mice – *shivering* When I was a young girl… we visited my Aunt in Kansas… with my two younger sisters we sat on the porch floor to play jacks. Spread our legs out, touching one anothers feet ever so slightly… As I bounced the ball and grabbing random jacks a mouse… RAN UP MY shorts leg and stopped in my croch!! OMG!!! I stood up doing some sort of hyterical dance!

Let’s just say — I am forever scared. And frankly… 🙂 I think I have a pretty darn good reason.

Tell you kitty — I wouldve paid her good shopping money to catch that thing!! hahhha!

Isn’t Mishka gorgeous!?!?!?
Likes cat food, rather, does she? 😉
We once had a mouse in our apt. we trapped it, put it outside and it cam back in!
UGH.
The next time, we weren’t humane—sad to say.
(Our girls were babies, and I didn’t want anything weird-mousy-related to happen to them).
Ah, well.
What a cute post–your pets have quite the vocabulary!
HUGS!
~me

Oh dear.
I confess — I loathe mice, except in Beatrix Potter illustrations and stories. But in my house? Nuh-uh. I do not mess around. I won’t go into the details, but I take no prisoners.

We’ve lived in the past in dwellings where mice ran amuck, where boxes of crackers were empty when you took them out of the pantry. Yes, they are cute, but any mouse hapless enough to wander into That Old House is quickly sent to meet his Maker. Humanely.
I use something that’s much more reliable and far more humane than the typical mousetrap or –horrors!– the glue trap.

And it is not our dog Dion. He has the attitude of your cats. “What, me worry?”

Deborah: So good to see you again. When I wear my purple earrings, I think of you! And to let you know, my Mom wears her scarf tucked into her Spring coat. She always mentions your kindness. Thank you again!

I saw your comment on Cass’s blog and had to stop by at check out your house. We live out in the country sort of (farm fields around me) and we have a huge problem with mice. I’ve never seen them come inside the house, but they are in both garages and have totally overtaken out shed. I have Bounce dryer sheets in my attic so they don’t go up there. I guess there is something about the smell of them that they don’t like. Glad I stopped by. I am a huge postcard lover although I don’t have a ton of them yet.

Deborah, I would have expected from you to do a no kill capture. I hope all is well with you. I think we are all missing the chats at chit chat and honestly, the old whit. Spring is well on its’ way and I walked through the gardens this morning to see new growth. Have a wonderful weekend.
Alaina

He he. That’s how our cats would react to a mouse in the house, too. In fact, the last time we had a mouse in our house, the cats acted like they were afraid of it. I guess, what can you expect out of overfed housecats. 🙂
I love that quote at the top of the page, too. We get a lot of little ants in our house in the summer, and I say, might as well leave them alone. They do clean up any of the crumbs that I miss underneath the dining table!
Hope you have a wonderful weekend!
Beth.